Monthly Coffee Selection

Monthly Coffee Selection

Every month, I explore two different coffee beans in Istanbul, sometimes from around the world. Here, I share their stories, tasting notes, and brewing impressions, from fruity Ethiopian beans to deep and nutty South American roasts along with suggested coffee companions.


November 2025 Selections

In this month, two special coffee beans from the Perk Up Coffee, an İzmir-based coffee shop, are featured in our monthly selection.

Coffee Companions:


Books: Novel 11, Book 18 by Dag Solstad
Bjørn Hansen, a respected town treasurer, turns fifty and is haunted by the sense that chance has dictated his life. Years ago, he left his family for a lover and a new life in a provincial town, only for that relationship to fade as well. Alone and disillusioned, he devises a daring plan to upend his existence, aided by the enigmatic Dr. Schiøtz.

When his estranged son suddenly reappears, Bjørn’s life grows more tangled, yet his urge to gamble with reality drives him to Vilnius, where illusion and truth blur. Dag Solstad’s Novel 11, Book 18, winner of the Norwegian Critics Prize, is a sharp existential portrait of risk, meaning, and midlife reckoning.
Articles:
Figure Partners with Nvidia to Accelerate Robot Deployment, Technology Magazine, Link

Tame Impala says Turkish musician Baris Manco inspired new album ‘Deadbeat’, Türkiye Today, Link


Music: Tame Impale – Deadbeat Link


October 2025 Selections

In October, two special coffee beans from the Coffee Department, an Istanbul-based coffee shop, are featured in our monthly selection

Coffee Companions:

Books: T Singer by Dag Solstad

T Singer opens with thirty-four-year-old Singer, a recent library school graduate, traveling by train from Oslo to the small town of Notodden in Norway’s mountainous Telemark region. His intention is to start a deliberately anonymous life as a librarian. However, Singer unexpectedly falls in love with Merete Saethre, a ceramicist with a young daughter from a previous relationship. After several years together, their relationship nears its end, but a car accident triggers a profound shift in Singer’s life.

The novel’s narrator emphasizes that this is not a happy story. Still, as with all of Dag Solstad’s works, the writing blends humor and darkness in a memorable way. Overall, T Singer represents a more explicitly existential turn compared to Solstad’s earlier works.

Articles:

How Labor and the Left Can Bolster Zohran Mamdani – By Ian Sherwood, Jacobin Link

Sloponomics: who wins and loses in the AI-content flood? – The Economist Link

Music: Byörk – Mount Wittenberg Orca Link